Example. This program illustrates the difference between an override method in a derived class, and a method that is not an override method. It does nothing useful but helps us learn about override methods.

Here: In the example, the class A is the base class. It has the virtual method Y.

In this example, the A type is used to reference the B and C types. When the A type references a B instance, the Y override from B is used. But when the A type references a C instance, the Y method from the base class A is used.

Note: The override modifier was not used. The C.Y method is local to the C type.

Warning: In the above program, the C type generates a warning because C.Y hides A.Y. Your program is confusing and could be fixed.

Tip: If you want C.Y to really "hide" A.Y, you can use the new modifier, as in "new public void Y()" in the declaration.

Research. The C# specification helps us understand override methods. With override, we specialize an "existing inherited virtual method." We provide a new implementation for it. This is at first confusing.

Tip: I recommend writing a test program to see how this works. This may help you understand.

Whereas a virtual method introduces a new method, an override method specializes an existing inherited virtual method by providing a new implementation of that method.

Summary. The override modifier is needed for implementing polymorphic behaviors in derived classes. You can re-implement a virtual base method. This causes the base implementation to be ignored in favor of the "override" method.

And: This polymorphic behavior is core to object-oriented design in many programs.